This evaluation is incorrect. Planes would not turn better with out a V stab.
This also is not necessarily true. Just because you lost a V stab, it does not mean the aircraft is not stable in the yaw axis.
The fuselage can also provide a degree of stability depending on is shape and size.
And finally , rudders and V stabs do not normally make you turn, LIFT generated by the wing is what makes you turn.
HiTech
Appreciate your comments Hi Tech, but: #1- a rudder is on a aircraft to control "Yaw" about the vertical axis! #2- The rudder is on the aircraft to overcome the adverse "yaw" created by the down aileron in a turn. Next time you are in a real aircraft, start a left or right turn, with out touching the rudder and you will notice the nose of the aircraft moves in the opposite direction that you want to turn, before lift of the wing overcomes it and it starts turning in the direction you want the aircraft to go in. The vertical stabilizer is designed by the aircraft designers to "hold" the aircraft in a straight line when flying at the design Cruise speed. Example, the P-51B and D models, if you are standing behind the aircraft looking forward, the leading edge of the vertical stab is offset to the left, 1.26 degrees. The reason for this is to overcome torque and "P" factor in straight and level flight,at the design cruise speed. If you exceed the design Cruise speed, which if I recall correctly is 289MPH, IAS, it will turn to the right without any input from the pilot. If you slow to less than 289MPH, IAS, it will turn to the left without any input from the pilot. But, that is why we have trim-tabs, so that you may trim the aircraft to fly "hands off" at any speed, and to relieve control pressure! The only thing the fuselage does for an aircraft is carry the pilot, sometimes fuel, the engine and etc. The Fuselage does nothing to aid flight, as it only produces DRAG! Check the shape of many supersonic aircraft and see how they gradually get to the famous "coke" bottle shape. By the way, these are not my flight princpals, these were established more than 70 or 80 years ago by people who were a lot smarter than I am. I Was a professonal pilot from 1953 to 1996, with 22,924 hours total time, and I am still learning today!!!!